The Donald Sterling Saga: Doc Rivers Unchained

It’s official. Donald Sterling, the notorious former Los Angeles Clippers owner and downtown L.A. slumlord is out of the NBA, and the league, its owners, and partners can all breathe a sigh of relief. Court records this week indicate that Sterling botched his summer-long attempt to regain ownership of the Clippers by failing to petition the California Supreme Court on the matter of reversing its sale to Steve Ballmer.

According to Sports Illustrated’s Michael McCann, Sterling had 10 business days from Aug. 13 – the date an intermediate appellate court summarily rejected Sterling’s past petitions – to appeal the $2 billion sale of the Clippers.

With the Sterling threat behind the team, the former Microsoft CEO Ballmer’s first move was rewarding the man who worked the hardest at mitigating the backlash.

Rivers’ reward for being a good shepherd is a credit to him as a carpetbagging business man.


There have been winners throughout since Sterling’s recorded conversations were leaked in April. Ballmer and his group get to own an NBA team, which they promise not to move to Seattle. Even if he’s not around to see the full value mature, Sterling stands to make an over 15,000 percent profit on the sale and wife Shelly Sterling, who according to reports brokered the sale, realizes her potential to be more than just a kept woman at age 80. But none have come out as successfully unscathed as Doc Rivers.

Since 2011, Major League Baseball has celebrated the contributions of Jackie Robinson, the man who broke the color barrier in baseball. However, it may surprise people to know that Robinson views his place in history differently. Despite what we are led to believe about change Robinson effected, he declared in his autobiography, “I know that I am a black man in a white world. I never had it made.”

Rivers, a respected coach leaguewide, brokered his way to Los Angeles last summer via trade between the Clippers and Boston Celtics. Upon Doc’s arrival, Sterling handed over the reigns of the organization and a three-year, $21 million contract to him. Doc coached the team to a 57-25 record, good for third in the Western Conference and home court advantage in the first round of the playoffs. Meanwhile, Shelly was suing Sterling’s mistress V. Stiviano over gifts and private audio when one of Sterling’s taped conversations with Stiviano was leaked to TMZ and shit got real reality.

In the aftermath of the leaked audio filled with the Octogenarian’s racist gibberish, Clippers players were flooded with texts and calls from other players requesting that they take the lead in a public stance for all of them and not play. An opportunity to reshape professional basketball had been created and the Clippers found themselves as potential catalysts for a major metamorphosis.

The NBA Playoffs was the biggest sporting event going in late April and the media had already taken a sympathetic posture towards Clippers players. Ironically, they were the most equipped team to navigate through such an ordeal: not only did the team include Rivers – heralded as a leader and father figure by players around the league (of whom 78 percent are black), but their best player, Chris Paul, is the NBA Players Association President and the league’s premiere point guard.

“If Doc were to leave, that would be a disaster,” Clippers CEO Dick Parsons told reporters at the time. “Doc is the father figure of the team. Chris is the on-court captain of the team. But Doc is really the guy who leads the effort. He’s the coach, the grown-up, he’s a man of character and ability – not just in a basketball sense, but in the ability to connect with people and gain their trust. The team believes in him and admires and loves him. If he were to bail, with all the other circumstances, it would accelerate the death spiral.”

So in the only sport where the black man is the face of the league, Doc convinced everyone that he was the perfect person to handle such a delicate situation.


 

The ball was in their court but a boycott would be bad for business to say the least and Sterling didn’t invest $21 million in Rivers and $107 million in Paul the previous offseason to be bad for business. Sterling, already a pariah of sponsors, was kept away from the team amid the firestorm. Rivers made certain that he became the face and voice of the franchise, convincing his players to forfeit their own. Paul in turn relinquished his responsibilities as NBAPA President to former player Sacramento Mayor Kevin Johnson, and he and his Clippers teammates were kept away from media – a violation of NBA rules. What the team was allowed to do in protest – wear their warm ups inside out prior to the game – was a nonstarter.

The remaining 29 NBA owners, only one of which is Black, were cautious as Commissioner Adam Silver banned Sterling for life and fined him $2.5 million – the maximum allowed. Even after the banning, Silver denied ever knowing Sterling’s history of racism until his most recent act went mainstream. Players immediately took to Twitter to applaud Silver and his symbolic banning although Sterling still owned the team. With the players appeased, and ownership vulnerable to whistleblowing, Doc leveraged the league’s reluctance against itself and acquired more clout, money and job security. He found it inappropriate for his players to boycott during the playoffs but more than acceptable to threaten it himself during contract negotiaitons. In the aftermath, the NBA returns to the status quo: a culture of black face/white ownership. The same culture that took men like Robinson and made them unchained slaves.

Wizards Finances Stump Big FA Splashes

By Teddy Owusu

Washington – The Washington Wizards are in desperation mode this off season. Not only is the team’s roster super thin, they are due to lose a bunch of money. Despite earning a playoff berth for the first time in six years and winning in the second round for the first time in 32, the Wizards will reportedly net -$13 million. Washington will be among nine other NBA teams that, following the league’s upcoming revenue sharing payments, will be in the tank after the 2013-2014 season.

With half the roster in free agency, Washington management – Ernie Grunfeld, President of Basketball Operations and VP Tommy Sheppard have been scrambling to gather enough coins to at least go after integral free agents Trevor Ariza and Marcin Gortat. After fumbling through Ted Leonsis’ couch cushions, last Thursday’s draft-day trade between Washington and the Los Angeles Lakers for the 46th pick (Jordan Clarkson) was the first major attempt to recoup some of the lost revenue.

“We focused in on two, three players who we thought would be there but were gone by the time it was our turn to pick, and we didn’t want to waste it and just bring someone in that we didn’t think would fit in with what we were trying to do,” Grunfeld told reporters at Verizon Center late Thursday night.

Notwithstanding, a young, 6-5 point guard, who can score (18ppg), if not an upgrade to current backup Andre Miller (38), would certainly be a cheap and auspicious move by Wizards management. Instead, it appears the team has its sights set on getting older.

“Nothing really came up for us,” said Grunfeld. “We felt like it was best to move the pick for cash considerations, and this way it opens up another roster spot for us to get someone who’s established.”

All that matters is that Washington can win now. Wizards brass figures that if last year’s team was good enough to reach the second round in 2014, they’ve at least got another playoff berth in them in 2015. The East, as weak as it was last year, is in upheaval this off season. Half the playoff teams Miami (LeBron James, Dwyane Wade, Chris Bosh – free agency), Brooklyn (traded coach), Toronto (Kyle Lowry – free agency) and Indiana (various absurdities) all have huge question marks this upcoming season.

So the Wizards are keeping home intact. During last month’s exit interviews, Wizards players to-a-man announced that they’d prefer to return but unlike the Heat’s Bosh, neither Ariza nor Gortat intimated that they’d take a pay cut to stay with the home team. Despite how potentially overpaying last year’s team may undermine its future, the fact is, they can’t afford not to. Washington can’t afford another losing season – they lost $13 million during the most successful season in decades! At least with Gortat and Ariza they have pieces they know work with its young core of John Wall and Bradley Beal.

Washington was $11 million over the salary cap in 2014 and is currently at $16 million under for 2015.

Washington has already committed 25% of its salary cap to Wall for the next five years and $26 million through 2016 to 32-year-old Nene, and currently only has seven players signed to its roster.

Sheppard and head coach Randy Wittman have traveled way out to Poland to woo Gortat, who averaged 13.2 points and 9.5 rebounds in 80 games, made over $7.7 million in the final year of a five-year, $33.95 million contract he signed with Orlando. Gortat has piqued the interest of several teams but the Wizards own his (early) Bird Rights, meaning they can offer him the biggest contract and initiate contract negotiations earlier than any other team.

In a career year, Ariza averaged 14.4 points, 6.2 rebounds, 2.5 assists and 1.6 steals per game last season for the Wizards. The 10-year vet is rumored to be seeking a three to four year deal for $9-10 million per year after the team picked up his $7.7 million player option last season.

There are a lot of factors that brought the Washington Wizards to such a crossroads: bad signings, bad trades, poor planning, Andray Blatche etc. Still, management believes the best they can do at this juncture is to continue to ensure gradual success on the court in the hopes of immediate windfall. 

 

Update:

Trevor Ariza is with the Houston Rockets after a three-team sign and trade that included Washington and New Orleans. Washington will receive center Melvin Ely and a trade exception as part of the deal. The Rockets send center Omer Asik, forward Omri Casspi and cash to New Orleans. Houston will also get forward Alonzo Gee, guard Scotty Hopson and a 2015 first-round draft pick from the Pelicans.

The Wizards have indeed resigned center Marcin Gortat to a five-year, $60 million contract.